Selfie sticks banned by some Montreal museums - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 15, 2024, 03:06 PM | Calgary | 0.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Selfie sticks banned by some Montreal museums

For security reasons and peace of mind, Montreal museums are starting to ban the use of selfie sticks.

'Wand of narcissism' a danger to art and artifact exhibitions

Sandy Johal uses a selfie stick to take a picture of herself in Times Square in New York, Thursday, Jan. 8, 2015. Several Montreal museums are banning selfie sticks in order to protect their art and artifacts. (Seth Wenig/AP)

Montreal museums are beginning to banselfiesticks in the exhibitions.

The camera extender known as aselfiestick makes it easier to get a flatteringself-portrait.

But the wand of narcissism, as it is sometimes called, is not welcome in the Montreal Museum of Fine Artsnor atPointe--CallireArchaeology Museum.

Mainly it's because of the space in the museum and to protect the artifacts, the objects and to be fair to other visitors also," saidClaude-SylvieLemery,head of communications atPointe--Callire.

Lemerysaid their exhibition rooms are already small and if people use the sticks, it could be dangerous.

TheMMFAconsiders theselfiestick intrusive and potentially dangerous for the security of the works of art.

ElisabethButikoferfrom theMMFAtold Radio-Canada it wants to make sure the museum is a safe, peaceful place.

"This is a new phenomenon and even if its not that popular yet we saw that it was coming and decided to take a stand," she said.

The Montreal Museum of Contemporary Art is also considering a ban.

In the U.S., several museums are putting in place policies to deal with theselfiestick.

The Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington banned the sticks this February, and New York City'sMetropolitan Museum of Art also forbids them.

SreeSreenivasan, the Met's chief digital officer, was quoted in theNew York Timesas saying, "It's one thing to take a picture at arm's length, but when it is three times arm's length, you are invading someone else's personal space."

Inventor didn't see ban coming

In an interview on CBC Radios morning showDaybreakWayne Fromm, the Canadian inventor of theselfiestick, saidhe never anticipated these bans.

"When I invented theQuikPod it really wasnt for narcissism. It was to have photographs for posterity that would include everyone,"Fromm, who is from Toronto, said.

As for their use in art museums, Fromm said he agreed with comments about common sense and etiquette.

"I believe to protect the artifacts its not safe to allow somebody to horizontally or laterally support their camera," he said.

New tech, new visitors?

The ban on theselfiestick does raise issues about attracting younger visitors to museums and how to deal with new technology.

Katy Perrysselfiein front of American Gothic by Grant Woodat the Chicago Art Institute which was posted toPinterestlast summer was a huge publicity windfall for the art museum.

Museums including theMMFAdo allow hand-held self portraits on smartphones.

But just as symphony orchestras have had to think about whether or not to allow tweeting during a performance, museums are now trying to figure out how to deal with this new gear and our fascination with posting photos of ourselves on social media.